Raymond Smith v. Holly Farish

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 22, 2021
Docket2021CU0196, 2021CU0197
StatusUnknown

This text of Raymond Smith v. Holly Farish (Raymond Smith v. Holly Farish) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Raymond Smith v. Holly Farish, (La. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL

FIRST CIRCUIT

2021 CU 0196

R.S.

VERSUS

H.F.

Consolidated with 4.

2021 CU 0197

H.B.

Judgment Rendered: JUL 2 2 2021

APPEALED FROM THE TWENTY-SECOND JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT IN AND FOR THE PARISH OF ST. TAMMANY STATE OF LOUISIANA DOCKET NUMBER 2019- 14306 c/ w 2019- 14360, DIVISION " K"

HONORABLE MARY C. DEVEREUX, JUDGE

Mark J. Mansfield Attorneys for Plaintiff/Appellant Amy C. Cowley R.S. Covington, Louisiana

Angela Cox Williams Attorneys for Defendant/Appellee Jesmin Basanti Finley H.F. Slidell, Louisiana

BEFORE: McDONALD, HOLDRIDGE, and PENZATO, JJ. McDONALD, J.

In this child custody case, the trial court granted the mother' s request to

relocate with the child to Sour Lake, Texas. The father appealed that judgment.

After review, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The parents in this case, R. S. ( the father) and H.F. ( the mother), were in a

romantic relationship from 2005 to 2008 but did not marry.' They had one child

together, T.B. S., born on January 31, 2007. R.S. and H.F. broke up when T.B. S.

was around one and -a -half years old. H.F. later married C. B., who worked as a

rigger. H.F. and C.B. had two daughters together, age three and seven at the time

of trial. The parties amicably co -parented for twelve years without a custody

judgment. The parties were unable to agree upon child support, which was then

established by a nonsupport order. At the time of trial, R.S. paid $ 755. 00 monthly

child support. T.B. S. lived with H.F. all year, R.S. had visitation three weekends a

month, and the parties rotated holidays.

H.F. took T.B. S. to his doctor and dental appointments and was a room

mother and a volunteer at his school. H.F. was the primary parent regarding

T.B. S.' s education, and she attended all of his parent/teacher conferences and open

houses. H.F. and C. B. invited R.S. to events at their home, including events for

T.B. S. and his half siblings. R.S. worked long hours as a field service technician,

traveled for work, and was unable to commit to seeing T.B. S. during the week for

the first ten years of T.B. S.' s life. Two years prior to trial, R.S. started his own

business to have more control over his schedule and more time available to see

T.B. S. During the ten years prior to trial, R.S. had spent around 98 days a year

with T.B. S.

The initials of the child and the parents are used to protect the identity of the minor child. See Uniform Rules -Courts of Appeal, Rules 5- 1 and 5- 2. 2 On August 19, 2019, R.S. filed a " VERIFIED MOTION FOR PATERNITY,

IN THE ALTERNATIVE, DNA TESTS TO PROVE PATERNITY, CUSTODY

AND FOR INJUNCTIVE RELIEF TO PREVENT UNLAWFUL RELOCATION

OF MINOR CHILD OUT OF STATE" in suit number 2019- 14306. R.S.

maintained that he formally acknowledged T.B. S at the hospital when he was born

and that he was listed on T.B. S.' s birth certificate. He requested a DNA test if H.F.

refused to acknowledge his paternity. R.S. maintained that H.F. intended to

relocate to Sour Lake, Texas, with T.B. S. due to C. B.' s job there. R.S. opposed the

relocation of T.B. S. to Sour Lake, Texas, and sought joint custody with himself as

the domiciliary parent.

On August 21, 2019, H.F. sent R.S. a letter notifying him that she proposed

to relocate with T.B. S. to Sour Lake, Texas, around May 23, 2020, after the 2019-

2020 school year ended. Also on August 21, 2019, H.F. filed a petition to

establish custody in a second suit, 2019- 14360. She asked that R.S. be declared

the father of T.B. S., that the parties be given joint custody, and that she be

designated the domiciliary parent.

On September 11, 2019, in the first suit, H.F. filed a motion for permission

to relocate with T.B. S. to Sour Lake, Texas, due to C. B.' s employment there. The

parties filed a joint motion to consolidate the suits, and on September 19, 2019,

they were consolidated into 2019- 14306.

Prior to trial, on November 7, 2019, the parties stipulated that R.S. was the

legal and biological father of T.B. S., and they agreed to joint custody with H.F. as

the domiciliary parent. The parties did not agree to a visitation schedule, but did

agree to share holidays according to a schedule. The hearing officer recommended

that R.S. continue to have visitation with T.B. S. three out of four weekends a

month during the school year, with a rotating 7/ 7 day schedule in the summer. The

3 trial court ordered that this temporary order remain in place until the trial. The trial

was conducted June 15 and 16 and July 23, 2020.2 At the start of the trial T.B. S. testified at a Watermeier3 hearing, and

afterward the parties advised the trial court that although R.S. had technically filed

his opposition before H.F. sought judicial permission to relocate, H.F. had the

burden of proof and would proceed first if acceptable to the trial court. The trial

court agreed. The parties also stipulated that H.F. would be moving to Texas

regardless of the trial court' s decision, and they stipulated to a proposed custody

schedule without knowing which party would have domiciliary custody.

At the close of trial, the trial court rendered judgment in favor of H.F.,

finding the proposed relocation was made in good faith by H.F. and was in T.B. S.' s

best interest, and granting H.F.' s request to relocate with T.B. S. to Sour Lake,

Texas. The trial court noted that T.B. S. wanted to relocate with his mother and that

H.F. had always been the domiciliary parent. The trial court used the visitation

schedule stipulated to by the parties for the non -domiciliary parent. The schedule

provided for R.S. to have more time with T.B. S., at approximately 120 days a year.

The judgment was signed on August 5, 2020.4 R.S. appealed the judgment.

On appeal, R.S. makes the following assignments of error:

1. It was legal error for the [ trial court] to ignore the enumerated, relocation factors of La. R.S. 9: 355. 14 and instead [ apply] La. C. C. art. 134 factors to determine whether to grant [ the] relocation

request] .

2 The trial was delayed due to Covid- 19.

3 See Watermeier v. Watermeier, 462 So. 2d 1272 ( La. App. 5th Cir.), writ denied, 464 So. 2d 301 ( La. 1985). A Watermeier hearing is a hearing in chambers, outside the presence of the parents, but in the presence of their attorneys, with a record of the hearing to be made by the court reporter, to inquire as to the competency of a child to testify as to custody. In re D.C.M., 2013- 0085 ( La. App. 1 Cir. 6/ 11/ 13), 170 So. 3d 165, 168, n. 9, writ denied, 2013- 1669 ( La. 7/ 17/ 13), 118 So. 3d 1102.

a After H.F. filed a motion to clarify and/or modify the judgment, the parties entered into a stipulated judgment agreeing upon: details of exchanging T.B. S.; that T.B. S. would not travel on Christmas Day; providing additional visitation with T.B. S. if either party were in the same state as T.B. S. during the summer or a holiday that T.B. S. was with the other parent; and limitations on introducing prospective new partners to T.B. S. or having a prospective new partner sleep over when T.B. S. was present.

2 2. The [ trial court] erred in relying on the testimony of [ T.B.

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Related

Watermeier v. Watermeier
462 So. 2d 1272 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1985)
Nelson v. Land
818 So. 2d 91 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2001)
Gathen v. Gathen
66 So. 3d 1 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 2011)
In re D.C.M.
170 So. 3d 165 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2013)

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